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Takeyoshi Kawashima

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Died
  
1992

Books
  
Human Settlement Systems: Spatial Patterns and Trends

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Takeyoshi Kawashima (川島 武宜, 17 October 1909 – 21 May 1992) was a Japanese jurist, a prominent representative of post-war liberalism in Japan and the country's leading legal sociologist.

Serving as Sakae Wagatsuma's assistant after 1932, Kawashima was appointed professor of civil law at the University of Tokyo in 1934. In his writings, he sought to develop a system of modern, Western, capitalist society based on the principle of the exchange of goods, which he contrasted to Japanese society with its remaining pre-modern and feudalist elements.

His criticism of Japanese domestic ideology in The familial structure of Japanese society (日本社會の家族的構成, Nihon shakai no kazokuteki kōsei) (1954) was a popular success. As a collaborator on the post-war reform of Japanese family law, Kawashima was unable to realize his ambitious ideas, but served as a counterweight to conservatives including Eiichi Makino.

References

Takeyoshi Kawashima Wikipedia